John Giotis, Chair of the Florida Council for Safe Communities, made the following statement regarding Senate Bill 442:
“Senate Bill 442, which would ban hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in Florida, is an unnecessary overreaction to activists who believe fracking puts Florida residents at risk. As our name indicates, the Florida Council for Safe Communities opposes all public policies that endanger our citizens, and we oppose this bill because there is no compelling evidence that a fracking ban is necessary to protect our citizens.
“On the contrary, fracking has been used safely in the United States for many decades. The EPA, among others, has studied the practice and concluded that there is no evidence that it adversely impacts drinking water resources. The cleaner-burning natural gas it produces has actually helped to reduce carbon emissions significantly, contributing to the health of our environment.
“Banning a safe technology that holds the promise of unleashing even more of our state’s energy resources based on emotion rather than science is shortsighted. We urge Florida legislators to look at the facts and reject the false idea that banning fracking will keep Floridians safer.”
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State’s Direct Care Provider Rate Severely Impacts Individuals with Disabilities, Families and Care Givers
Direct care providers are the lifeline for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their family members. However, the rates paid to providers by the State of Florida remain well below the FY 2003 levels. As a result, thousands of individuals, families and providers from around the state are facing negative impacts due to what is known as the Provider Rate Crisis.
The Provider Rate Crisis creates a destructive cycle. In order to maintain an adequate life, a variety of care services are needed for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Families often rely on these services in order to support their loved ones. Moreover, with rising business expenses, the need to comply with new federal labor laws and turnover rates as high as 40 percent, direct care provider companies and independent providers are struggling to stay in business. Employees are not earning an adequate living wage and are forced to seek other employment. As a result, many providers have left the statewide program, leaving individuals and families with few service options, less provider availability and, in some cases, reduced or harmful quality of care.
In an effort to reverse this cycle, the developmental disabilities community seeks to educate, empower and raise awareness of the Provider Rate Crisis. “The combination of concerns surrounding this issue poses a distinct threat to the health and safety of individuals with disabilities who are included in the community,” said Margaret Hooper, public policy coordinator of the Florida Developmental Disabilities Council (FDDC).
FDDC is one of the numerous statewide groups encouraging the Legislature to take action by increasing the provider rates in order to fund adequate wages, support care providers and consider the individuals and their well-being. “The provider rates must increase. With the number of available providers decreasing 35 percent since FY 2007-2008, individuals are not receiving adequate care and families are unable to support their loved ones,” explains Hooper.
About FDDC
The Florida Developmental Disabilities Council was established in 1971 to help plan individual and family-centered supports for persons with disabilities in Florida. The Council also guides the development and administration of services for people with developmental disabilities by planning and funding research, innovations, and programs designed to improve the quality of their lives.
To address system-wide issues affecting people with developmental disabilities, the Council engages in state and national advocacy activities in support of legislation, policies, and programs responsive to the needs of people with developmental disabilities.
The Developmental Disabilities Council is a non -profit organization that receives federal assistance from the Department of Health and Human Services Administration on Developmental Disabilities.
VA Selects UCF Historians to Archive Stories of Deceased Veterans
University of Central Florida team of scholars has been awarded a $290,000 contract from the National Cemetery Administration, an agency of the Department of Veterans Affairs, to archive the stories of veterans buried in the Florida National Cemetery for a new generation of students. UCF is one of three universities selected to launch the NCA’s Veterans Legacy Program.
The project, led by Amelia Lyons, associate professor of history and director of graduate programs, will engage UCF students in research and writing about veterans’ graves and monuments. In addition, UCF faculty and students will collaborate with Central Florida schools to produce interactive curriculums for K-12 students and organize a field trip to the cemetery in Bushnell, which is the county seat of Sumter County.
Involving students of all ages in the project will engage the community with the service and sacrifice of veterans, and will give undergraduate and graduate students a real-life lesson in professionalization, Lyons said.
“This experience with primary research – from identifying the subject and stories, to analyzing the sources to produce a narrative, and becoming a published author – is like no other,” Lyons said.
“Learning about the lives and stories of these soldiers is also teaching our students what a historian does,” she said. “It makes history real for them.”
Luke Bohmer, a history graduate student, recently participated in a field research day at the cemetery. “It is vital to go to where the history is, whether it’s a cemetery, or an archive. This is more humanizing and palpable than any statistic could ever be,” he said.
Janelle Malagon, an undergraduate, said she has “always had an interest in military history, and the VLP was a great hands-on experience where I had the unique opportunity to learn the stories of individual soldiers throughout American history.”
The corresponding website exhibit created by the research team – including Scot French, digital historian, Amy Giroux, a computer research specialist in UCF’s Center for Humanities and Digital Research, and graduate student assistants – will use software to virtually map the research, and UCF’s RICHES Mosaic Interface to create a digital archive.
The public will also be able to participate in the project through an interactive element at the cemetery. Giroux will lead the team in the creation of an augmented-reality app, which will include student-authored biographies of veterans for visitors.
Students are already aware of the impact the program will have. Malagon said the digital components will allow relatives to learn something about their veteran in a way that would not have been possible without the technology available today.
The Florida National Cemetery is one of 135 cemeteries overseen by the VA. Team members recently visited the site to begin their research.
And UCF researchers have already begun integrating assignments for the project into their graduate and undergraduate courses.
Students, including those in Lyons’ Modern Europe and the First World War class and Professor Barbara Gannon’s War and Society classes are conducting research, searching for any documented history on the veterans whose graves will be selected.
Undergraduate students are excited to participate in the project.
Kristina Himschoot comes from a family with deep military roots. Her parents met in the Air Force and both her grandparents served. “The VLP is becoming more important to me every time I learn something new about it,” she said. “I have the utmost respect for this project.”
Anson Shurr expects he will draw a deeper, more personal connection with veterans through his research. “Seeing their graves in person, epitaph and all, is personal enough, but once you realize that in many cases they lived in the same town or street as you, or you see a surname you know, it really hits home,” he said. He was particularly struck by the fact that people his own age put their lives and dreams on hold in order to fight in a war.
Kenneth Holliday, who is both a student and Army veteran, said that because April 6 marks the 100-year anniversary of the nation’s entry into World War I, the research is especially timely. ”We are in the centennial of World War I, there is no better time to recognize the service of these veterans,” he said.
Graduate students in Professor Caroline Cheong’s Seminar in Historic Preservation course are helping to identify the graves and monuments to be included and are photographing the sites for both the webpage and the app.
French, associate professor and director of public history, is having students in his Viewing American History in the 20th Century class create interactive digital materials for use on the website, and John Sacher, associate professor of history and liaison with public schools, is integrating the results of the project into K-12 curriculum that will be available for use in schools across the U.S.
In May, the UCF team and local middle- and high-school students will travel to the cemetery as a kickoff event for the program. UCF student researchers will interact with younger students at the cemetery, providing what Holiday sees as “a much more personal connection on an individual level. Instead of remembering the major battles and the big names of military and political leaders, the students and community can remember that at the heart of the conflict were average people that all of us can probably relate to in some way.”
Gannon, who is also coordinator of UCF’s Veterans History Project, said that because of the university’s engagement with veterans and rich history in creating extensive interactive exhibits and web-based tools, the funding doesn’t come of a surprise.
Other schools selected by the VA’s National Cemetery Administration for the project are San Francisco State University and and Black Hills State University.
“The award of these three contracts signifies the VA National Cemetery Administration’s dedication and commitment to providing enhanced memorialization and lasting tributes that commemorate the service and sacrifice of veterans,” said Ronald E. Walters, interim undersecretary for memorial affairs.
The contracts are the first of many planned initiatives to engage educators, students, researchers and the general public through the Veterans Legacy Program. For more information, visit: www.cem.va.gov/legacy.
Public Meeting: Wekiva Parkway Section 8 Design-Build Project
Interchange at Interstate 4 and State Road 417
The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) is holding a public information meeting to review the latest preliminary design for the Wekiva Parkway Section 8 design-build project in Seminole County.
The project limits are from Orange Boulevard to east of Rinehart Road. The project includes the new Wekiva Parkway interchange at Interstate 4 (I-4). This will connect to State Road (S.R.) 417, completing the beltway around Central Florida. The project consists of designing and building 2.63 miles of limited access toll road, and includes bridges, drainage and lighting features.
The meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, March 21, 2017, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Lakeside Fellowship United Methodist Church located at 305 S. Orange Boulevard, Sanford, Florida 32771. The meeting is an open house where plans will be available for review and project staff will be available to address questions.
FDOT invites your participation and welcomes your comments regarding the preliminary design. Persons with disabilities who require accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act or persons who require translation services (free of charge) should contact Mary Brooks, Public Information Officer, by phone at (407) 694-5505, or by email at [email protected]. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact us by using the Florida Relay Service, 1-800-955-8771 (TDD) or 1-800-955-8770 (Voice).
Public participation is solicited without regard to race, color, national origin, age, sex, religion, disability or family status. Persons wishing to express their concerns relative to FDOT compliance with Title VI may do so by contacting Jennifer Smith, FDOT District Five Title VI Coordinator by phone at 386-943-5367, or via email at [email protected].
For additional information concerning the project, please contact [email protected] or 407-694-5505.
Governor Rick Scott Recognizes Three Educators with Governor’s Shine Award
During a meeting of the Florida Cabinet today, Governor Rick Scott recognized three outstanding educators with the Governor’s Shine Award. The Shine Award is presented to teachers and administrators in Florida who make significant contributions to the field of education. The educators honored today were recognized for their commitment to student success and to furthering their professional skills.
Governor Rick Scott said, “I am proud to present these three educators with the Shine Award today. Every day, Florida’s teachers go above and beyond to educate Florida’s students so they are prepared for higher education and careers. I applaud these educators for their dedication to ensuring the success of Florida’s future leaders.”
The following educators were presented with the Governor’s Shine Awards:
Demetria Clemons, Leon County – Clemons is principal of Sealey Elementary School in Tallahassee. Clemons is in her first year as a member of the Commissioner’s Leadership Academy, and in 2013 Clemons was recognized as Leon County School’s Joe Glick Administrator of the Year.
Lukas Hefty, Pinellas County – Hefty has been an educator for 11 years and is currently the Engineering Program Coordinator at Douglas L. Jamerson Elementary School in St. Petersburg. In January 2017, he was honored by the Milken Family Foundation for his work in developing the school’s nationally recognized STEM curriculum.
Brandon Wright, Hernando County – Wright teaches Advanced Placement (AP) Micro/Macroeconomics, AP U.S. Government, International Baccalaureate Economics and Economics with Financial Literacy at F. W. Springstead High School in Brooksville. He is the 2016 Hernando County District Teacher of the Year.
Attorney General Bondi Thanks DOJ for Additional Funding for Victims of Pulse Nightclub Attack
Attorney General Pam Bondi is thanking the U.S. Department of Justice for today awarding Florida more than $8 million to assist the victims of the attack at Pulse nightclub in Orlando last year.
“I am thrilled that my office will receive additional funding to help victims of the Orlando attack,” said Attorney General Bondi. “I want to thank the U.S. Department of Justice for awarding us the funds we requested so that we can continue to make payments and assist victims in any way possible.”
To date, the attack at Pulse nightclub is the deadliest mass shooting by a single individual, the most lethal incident of violence against the LGBTQ community in United States history and the largest terrorist attack in the country since 9/11. At the time of the shooting, more than 400 individuals occupied the nightclub. Of these victims, 49 people lost their lives, 53 suffered physical injuries and countless others were devastated by the attack.
Upon hearing of the tragedy, Attorney General Bondi immediately headed to Orlando with members of her victim advocate staff to assist the victims and their families with direct and indirect needs. The Attorney General’s victim advocates from across the state remained in Orlando for weeks after the attack, offering grief counseling to victims and families, assisting with medical bills and funeral expenses and forging collaborative relationships with other service providers to ensure the victims received all the help they needed.
The Florida Office of the Attorney General will administer the Antiterrorism and Emergency Assistance Program funds awarded today. The funds will go to direct victim service costs for operation of the Family Assistance Center in the immediate aftermath of the shooting. The funds will also ensure that victims, witnesses and first responders continue to receive essential services, including mental health counselling.
Governor Rick Scott Awards Major John Leroy Haynes with Governor’s Medal of Merit
Also awarded 41 veterans with the Governor’s Service Medal
During a meeting of the Florida Cabinet today, Governor Rick Scott recognized Major John Leroy Haynes with the Governor’s Medal of Merit. Major Haynes served in the U.S. Marines during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Governor Scott also awarded 41 Florida veterans with the Governor’s Veterans Service Medal.
Governor Rick Scott said, “I’d like to thank Major Haynes for his decades of brave and selfless devotion to serving our country, state, and community. I’m honored to present him with the Medal of Merit today to recognize his lifelong service and positive impact on the lives of veterans.”
Colonel Glenn Sutphin, Executive Director of the Florida Department of Veterans’ Affairs, said, “Major Haynes possesses every attribute that members of the military strive for; he is the epitome of the American military member. Not only has he defended his country in three wars, but he continues to advocate for his fellow veterans through public service.”
About Major John Leroy Haynes
Major John Leroy Haynes is a decorated veteran, serving 30 years in the United States Marines during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. His military decorations include the Silver Star Medal, the Purple Heart Medal, and the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal and the Cross of Gallantry. Following his active duty, Major Haynes served as State Commandant of the Maryland Marine Corps League. He has also served as a service officer for the Veterans Administration and the American Legion and is Chairman Emeritus of Florida Veterans Foundation.
Highlands County: SR 70 Project Development & Environment Study
SR 70 Project Development & Environment Study from Jefferson Avenue/Placid Lakes Boulevard to CR 29 Alternatives Public Workshop Tuesday, March 28, 2017
HIGHLANDS COUNTY
The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), District One, will hold an Alternatives Public Workshop to discuss the SR 70 from Jefferson Avenue/Placid Lakes Boulevard to County Road 29 Project Development & Environment (PD&E) Study in Highlands County, Florida. The public meeting “open house” is from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 28 at the Lake Placid Camp and Conference Center, 2665 Placid View Drive, Lake Placid, FL 33852. The study is evaluating widening the existing two-lane undivided roadway to four lanes and adding shoulders and a 10-foot detached multi-use path. FDOT invites you to attend the public workshop to review project alternatives.
This meeting is to present the project progress to-date and obtain comments on the alternatives being considered. Department representatives will be available during the meeting to informally discuss the project and answer questions. FDOT encourages attendees to come to this meeting at any time between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to review the proposed transportation improvements. FDOT will hold this meeting to give interested people the opportunity to review displays and talk one-on-one with staff.
FDOT solicits public participation without regard to race, color, national origin, age, sex, religion, disability, or family status. People who require special accommodations under the American with Disabilities Act or people who require translation services (free of charge) should contact Jamie Schley, District One Title VI Coordinator, at 863-519-2573 or by email at [email protected] at least seven (7) days prior to the meeting.
For more information about the project, please contact Steven Andrews, Project Manager, Florida Department of Transportation at (863) 519-2270 or [email protected] or visit the website at www.swflroads.com/sr70/jeffersontocr29.
The environmental review, consultation, and other actions required by applicable federal environmental laws for this project are being, or have been, carried out by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) pursuant to 23 U.S.C. §327 and a Memorandum of Understanding dated December 14, 2016 and executed by the Federal Highway Administration and FDOT.
Attorney General Bondi Introduces Resolution Recognizing Uber’s Anti-Human Trafficking Efforts
Attorney General Pam Bondi today introduced a resolution at the meeting of the Florida Governor and Cabinet recognizing Uber’s efforts and initiatives to educate drivers to help prevent human trafficking.
“Governor Scott and the Florida Cabinet joined me today in recognizing Uber’s proactive efforts to fight human trafficking,” said Attorney General Bondi. “The company and its drivers, operating in more than 70 countries, are uniquely positioned to help identify and ultimately prevent human trafficking and can play a key role in the fight to stop traffickers across the globe. Today’s resolution commends Uber for their commitment to safety in the communities drivers serve and in doing their part to put an end to this horrific crime.”
To view the resolution, click here.
Governor Rick Scott Recognizes James Stage with Young Entrepreneur Award
During a meeting of the Florida Cabinet today, Governor Rick Scott recognized 23-year-old James Stage, CEO of Queralyze, with the Governor’s Young Entrepreneur Award. Queralyze is an education platform software company designed to help students improve research and writing skills.
Governor Rick Scott said, “I’m proud to recognize James with the Young Entrepreneur Award today. His innovative approach to education is helping students achieve their goals and better prepare them for a career. I look forward to seeing Queralyze continue to succeed in Florida.”
James Stage, CEO of Queralyze, said “I’m honored to be recognized by Governor Scott with the Young Entrepreneur Award today. Queralyze is making a difference in the education process for students and teachers. It’s great to see the growth and success of Queralyze since its founding in 2014, and I’m excited to continue expanding so we can help more students succeed.”
For more information about Queralyze, visit www.queralyze.com.